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| United States Patent | 4319515 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4319515.html |
| Inventor(s) | Mackworth-Young; Robin (Garden House, Windsor Castle, Berkshire SL4 1NG, GB2) |
| Abstract | A tuning aid for tuning musical instruments, particularly keyboard
instruments, includes a sensor unit (12) which has an elongate
capacitative sensor probe which is capable of extending across one octave
of the instrument, and an octave switch (22) and a tone switch (20) on
which are manually set the nominal octave and note of the string being
measured. Amplifiers (16,24) including an AGC amplifier and controlled
band-pass filters (18,26) are responsive to the octave and tone switches
to select the measured tone. A divider (32) responsive to the octave
switch divides the measured frequency by a power of two. A divider (38) is
connected to the output of a crystal oscillator (36) to divide by a factor
dependent upon the tone switch setting. The outputs of the two dividers
are compared in a discriminator (34) which compares the two frequencies. A
meter (50) displays the sense and magnitude of the discriminator output so
as to display in terms of cents the amount by which the frequencies
differ. A sample and hold circuit (46) actuated by the AGC circuit (28)
causes the display to be held for a period of ten seconds, while operation
is inhibited for the first 150 milliseconds of the note sounded. |
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Title Information  |
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| Publication Date |
March 16, 1982 |
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| Priority Data |
May 10, 1978[GB]18737/78 |
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Title Information  |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A tuning aid for tuning musical instruments, comprising:
an input for connection to an audio sensor;
manually operable setting controls for setting the nominal octave and note
of the signal being measured;
amplifying and band-pass filtering means coupled to the input and
responsive to the setting controls;
first dividing means responsive to the setting controls for dividing the
frequency of the detected signal by a factor dependent upon the octave
determined by the setting controls;
a high stability oscillator;
a second dividing means for dividing the output of the oscillator by a
factor dependent upon the note determined by the setting control;
comparison means for counting the number of pulses from the second dividing
means for a period of time set by the output of the first dividing means
to thereby compare the frequencies of the first and second dividing means;
and
display means for displaying the output of the comparison means.
2. A tuning aid as claimed in claim 1, including means for subtracting a
predetermined number from the said counted number of pulses.
3. A tuning aid for tuning musical instruments, comprising:
an input for connection to an audio sensor;
manually operable setting controls for setting the nominal octave and note
of the signal being measured;
amplifying and band-pass filtering means coupled to the input and
responsive to the setting controls;
first dividing means responsive to the setting controls for dividing the
frequency of the detected signal by a factor dependent upon the octave
determined by the setting controls;
a high stability oscillator;
second dividing means for dividing the output of the oscillator by a factor
dependent upon the note determined by the setting controls;
comparison means for comparing the frequencies of the first and second
dividing means; and
display means for displaying the output of the comparison means;
means for causing the display means to hold the display for a predetermined
minimum period even if the input signal ceases before the end of the
period; and
delay means for delaying the operation of the tuning aid for a
predetermined period after an input signal is received at the input
terminal.
4. A tuning aid as claimed in claim 3, including an automatic gain control
(AGC) circuit coupled between the input and the comparison means, and
wherein the holding means is actuated in response to the operation of the
AGC circuit.
5. A tuning aid as claimed in claim 3, including an automatic gain control
(AGC) circuit coupled between the input and the comparison means, and
wherein the delay means is actuated in response to the operation of the
AGC circuit.
6. A pitch measurement device, comprising:
input means for connection to an audio sensor to supply an input signal to
be measured;
individual manually-operable controls for respectively setting the nominal
octave and note within an octave of the signal to be measured;
first and second band-pass filtering means coupled in series to the input
means and each responsive to the setting controls for passing signals of
desired pitch to be measured;
an automatic gain control (AGC) circuit including an AGC amplifier
connected in series between said first and second filtering means and
further including an AGC detector monitoring the output of said second
filtering means for supplying an AGC voltage to said AGC amplifier and
thereby making essentially independent of sound intensity the signal
output of said second filtering means;
squarer means receiving said signals of desired pitch to be measured from
said AGC detector and producing a square waveform signal of the same
frequency;
first dividing means responsive to the octave setting controls for dividing
the frequency of the square waveform signal by a factor dependent upon the
octave selected by the octave setting controls, and thereby producing
frequency signals which are (1) all located within a first single
preselected octave and (2) each located in said first single octave in
correspondence to the location of said input signal in a higher octave;
a high stability crystal oscillator;
second dividing means for dividing the output of the oscillator by a factor
dependent upon the note determined by the note setting controls and
thereby producing reference frequency signals which are (1) all located in
a second preselected octave and (2) each located in said second
preselected octave in correspondence to the location of the desired pitch
in its own octave, said second preselected octave being of frequency much
higher than that of said first preselected octave;
frequency discriminator means for comparing the frequencies of the output
signals of said first and second dividing means, said frequency
discriminator means being adapted to count the number of pulses from the
second dividing means for a period of time equal to the duration of a
preselected part of the output waveform of the first dividing means;
latch means for subtracting a predetermined number from the said counted
number of pulses, said subtracted predetermined number being a large
fraction of the counted number corresponding to an input signal frequency
identical to said desired pitch;
display means for displaying the output of said latch means, wherein the
display means displays the sense and magnitude of the output of the latch
means so as to display in terms of cents the amount by which the input
signal differs from the desired pitch;
holding means actuated in response to the operation of the AGC circuit for
causing the display means to hold the display for a predetermined minimum
period even if the input signal ceases before the end of the period;
delay means actuated in response to the operation of the AGC circuit for
delaying the operation of the pitch measurement device for a predetermined
period after an input signal is received at said input.
7. A tuning aid for tuning stringed musical instruments comprising the
measuring unit of claim 6 and a sensor unit having an elongate capacitive
sensor probe which is capable of extending across a plurality of strings.
8. The apparatus of claim 6 including a digital/analog converter for
producing a voltage magnitude proportional to the number of pulses
produced by said latch;
said holding means being a sample and hold circuit for applying the voltage
output of said d/a converter to a meter, for holding a given meter reading
for a period of time long enough to enable convenient reading by the
operator of the device.
9. The device of claim 6 including an AGC function detector driven by the
AGC signal from said AGC detector for detecting a large AGC signal
sufficient to indicate the presence of an input signal to be measured;
a monostable multi-vibrator set by said AGC function detector when it
senses a large AGC signal indicating the presence of an input signal to be
measured, the output of said monostable multi-vibrator controlling reading
out of the output of said latch means, said AGC function detector and
monostable multi-vibrator cooperating to provide said holding means and
delay means.
10. The device of claim 6 in which the period of counting by said
discriminator means is the period of one pulse cycle of said first
dividing means, the period of said first dividing means being about 5,000
times the period of said second dividing means, such that said frequency
discriminator produces an output signal of about 5,000 pulses when the
sensed frequency is equal to the desired pitch, said latch means
subtracting about 4,500 pulses from the pulse train output of said
discriminator means so as to magnify by approximately a factor of 10 a
discrepancy between said sensed frequency and desired pitch, the number of
pulses produced by said latch means being increased and decreased in
dependence on the magnitude and polarity of frequency error between the
sensed frequency and desired pitch.
11. A pitch measurement device, comprising:
an input for connection to an audio sensor to supply an input signal;
manually operable setting controls for setting the nominal octave and note
of the signal being measured;
amplifying and band-pass filtering means coupled to the input and
responsive to the setting controls;
first dividing means responsive to the octave setting controls for dividing
the frequency of the detected signal by a factor dependent upon the octave
determined by the setting controls;
a high stability oscillator;
second dividing means for dividing the output of the oscillator by a factor
dependent upon the note determined by the note setting controls and
thereby producing reference frequency signals which are (1) all located in
a second preselected octave and (2) each located in said second
preselected octave in correspondence to the location of the desired pitch
in its own octave, said second preselected octave being of frequency much
higher than that of said nominal octave;
comparison means for comparing the frequencies of the outputs of the first
and second dividing means, said comparison means being adapted to count
the number of pulses from the second dividing means for a period of time
equal to the duration of a preselected part of the output waveform of the
first dividing means;
display means for displaying the output of the comparison means, wherein
the display means displays the sense and magnitude of the output of the
comparison means so as to display in terms of cents the amount by which
the input signal differs from the desired pitch;
the display means being provided with means which causes the display means
to hold the display for a predetermined minimum period even if the input
signal ceases before the end of the period; and
delay means for delaying the operation of the tuning aid for a
predetermined period after an input signal is received at said input.
12. The device of claim 11, including a sensor unit having an elongate
capacitive sensor probe which is capable of extending across a plurality
of strings of a stringed musical instrument.
13. In a tuning aid, for tuning stringed musical instruments of the type
having several side-by-side metallic strings, comprising a measuring unit
for receiving an electrical input signal, comparing its frequency with a
reference, and displaying the result of the comparison;
the improvement comprising a sensor unit having an elongate capacitative
sensor probe which is capable of extending across a plurality of said
metallic strings in capacitive relation therewith.
14. The device of claim 13, in which said capacitive sensor probe comprises
an elongate metal strip long enough to extend transversely across said
plurality of metallic strings, means for mounting said metal strip in
close spaced relation transversely across said plurality of metallic
strings in capacitively coupled relation therewith, and oscillator circuit
means including said probe as a capacitive tuning element therein for
providing said signal to said measuring unit. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention is concerned with tuning aids for tuning musical
instruments, in particular keyboard instruments.
The invention provides in one aspect an improved tuning aid which uses
particularly simple circuitry to provide an accurate measurement of the
frequency of any selected note.
The invention also provides in another aspect an enhanced display of the
measurement, which display is more readily ascertainable by the musician.
Also the invention provides in a further aspect an improved sensor for a
tuning aid for use in tuning stringed instruments which is relatively
insensitive to noise, and furthermore can be made in different shapes to
give greater flexibility in use.
The invention in its various aspects is defined in the appended claims, to
which reference should now be made.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be described in detail, by way of example, with
reference to the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of the circuitry of the main part of a tuning aid
embodying the invention;
FIG. 2 is a circuit diagram of a suitable pick-up head for use with the
circuitry of FIG. 1; and
FIG. 3 illustrates an example of the pick-up head sensor.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to the drawing, a tuning aid designed for tuning stringed
instruments, particularly keyboard instruments, has a main unit 10 shown
in FIG. 1 and also a sensing head 12, illustrated diagrammatically. The
main unit 10 has an input 14 which, in use of the device, is connected to
the output of the pick-up head. A high input impedance amplifier 16
receives the signal from the input and is preferably manually adjustable
by means of a volume control 17. An active band-pass filter 18 is
connected to the output of amplifier 16. The band-pass filter includes an
RC circuit in which the resistance used is selected from twelve possible
values by means of a tone switch, and the capacitance used is selected
from six possible values by means of an octave switch. In FIG. 1 the
switches are diagrammatically represented by control lines 20 and 22
respectively. The centre frequency of the band-pass filter is varied by
means of the tone switch in the ratio required for an equi-tempered scale,
as given in the following table.
TABLE
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A 1.000
A.music-sharp., B.sup.b
1.059
B 1.122
C 1.189
C.music-sharp., D.sup.b
1.260
D 1.335
D.music-sharp., E.sup.b
1.414
E 1.498
F 1.587
F.music-sharp., G.sup.b
1.682
G 1.782
G.music-sharp., A.sup.b
1.888
A 2.000
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The centre frequency of the band-pass filter is varied by means of the
octave switch in the ratio of powers of two. Thus the combination of the
two switches can select any required tone or pitch over a range of six
octaves.
An AGC amplifier 24 is connected to the output of the band-pass filter 18
and a second band-pass filter 26 of identical construction to the filter
18 is connected to the output of the amplifier 24. More band-pass filters
can be used if found desirable; the band-pass filters together present a
sufficiently high Q factor to discriminate effectively against the main
harmonics emitted by the string being tuned. An AGC detector 28 is
connected to the output of filter 26 and supplies the control signal for
the AGC amplifier 24.
A squaring circuit 30 converts the output of the AGC detector 28 into
square wave pulses at the frequency of the input signal and these pulses
are divided by a power of two in a programmable divider 32. The selected
power of two is determined by the setting of the octave switch, and for
example for middle A of 440 Hz (Hertz), and the octave above it, the
divisor is 16. In this way the output of the divider will nominally range
from 27.5 Hz (for A natural) to 51.9 Hz (for G .music-sharp.), regardless
of the actual octave.
The output of the divider is applied to one input 34a of a frequency
discriminator 34. The other input 34b of the frequency discriminator 34
receives the output of a quartz crystal controlled oscillator 36 after
division in a second programmable divider 38. The crystal oscillator
provides an output of 2.5963 MHz and this is divided by a fixed factor to
give a frequency of 137 KHz and then multiplied by the appropriate factor
given in the Table above in dependence upon the output of a program
generator 40 controlled by the setting of the tone switch. In fact this
division and multiplication are combined into a single division operation.
Thus the output of the divider 38 will range between 137 and 259 KHz in
dependence on the tone selected from A to G .music-sharp..
The frequency discriminator 34 thus receives two signals at its inputs 34a
and 34b, of which the signal at input 34a represents the actual frequency
of the string being tuned, adjusted to bring it (nominally) within the
range 27.5 to 51.9 Hz, while the input 34b receives an extremely accurate
frequency which lies within the range 137 to 259 KHz in dependence on the
required tone. If the string is in tune, the two inputs differ in
frequency by a factor of exactly 5,000.
The frequency discriminator operates by counting the number of pulses
received at its input 34b between the leading edges of two successive
pulses received at its input 34a. This count is applied to a latch circuit
42 where it is held until replaced by a subsequent count. The frequency
discriminator includes counters arranged such that if the number of pulses
received at its input 34b between two pulses at its input 34a is exactly
5000, then the output of the discriminator will be 500, i.e. 4500 is
subtracted from the count. Any difference in the number of pulses counted
and 5000 is reflected as an equal difference in the output from 500. Thus
the output differs from 500 by the number of five-thousandths by which the
string is out of tune. One five-thousandth (or 0.02%) represents one
three-hundredth of a semitone, i.e. about 0.3 cents, (one cent being one
hundredth of a semitone).
Thus as the measured frequency changes by .+-.50 cents, the discriminator
output varies between 354 and 646. The output of the latch circuit 42 is,
as shown, applied to a digital-to-analogue converter 44 and thence to a
sample-and-hold circuit 46. The output of the sample-and-hold circuit is
applied through a buffer amplifier 48 to a moving coil meter 50. Because
the normal value of the discriminator output is 500 rather than zero, a
standard meter can be used rather than one with a centre zero.
The sample-and-hold circuit 46 is controlled as follows. The AGC signal
from the AGC detector 28 is, in addition to controlling the AGC amplifier
24, also applied to an AGC function detector circuit 52. This circuit
detects whether the AGC voltage is above or below a defined level, and
whether it is increasing or decreasing. This information then drives a
monostable circuit 54, as described in more detail below, which in turn
controls the sample-and-hold circuit 46.
The operation of the circuit of FIG. 1 will now be described with reference
to the tuning of a keyboard instrument.
To use the device the musician first selects the string to be tuned and
places a sensor adjacent the string. The sensor is preferably as described
below. The sensor forms part of a pick-up unit which includes a
preamplifier and the output of which is connected by a screened lead to
the input 14. The musician sets the octave and tone switches to the octave
and tone which is appropriate for the particular string. Then he strikes
the note.
The frequencies produced are amplified by the amplifiers 16 and 24, and
from them, the band-pass filters 18 and 26 select the fundamental
frequency of the particular tone. The AGC loop ensures that the signal is
essentially independent of the sound intensity so that the squarer 30 can
produce accurate square wave pulses. The pulse frequency produced can then
be accurately measured against a reference frequency.
The frequency discriminator 34 compares the reference frequency at its
input 34b with the incoming frequency, after division in divider 32, and
as noted above the number of pulses produced will depend upon the accuracy
of the note. The error in tuning is converted into an analogue signal
which is held in the sample-and-hold circuit 46 and displayed on the meter
50. The meter is calibrated in cents over a range of +50 to -50 cents,
thus the pointer indicates both the sense and magnitude of the pitch
error.
Some notes are typically detectable for only about 400 to 600 milliseconds
(ms). This is sufficient time to make the measurement, but it is not
sufficient for the musician to read it accurately from the meter. The
sample-and-hold circuit 46 thus holds the meter reading for a period of
about 10 seconds. This is achieved by the monostable circuit 54 which is
set by the AGC function detector when it senses a large AGC signal,
indicating the presence of a signal to be measured. In fact it is
desirable for there to be a short delay of typically 150 ms between the
AGC function detector detecting the presence of an input and setting the
monostable. This delay means that the first 150 ms of the signal are not
used for measurement, so that large interfering signals which occur
briefly at the instant when the string is struck do not affect the
measurement.
When the input signal is removed, the AGC control voltage is low, and this
causes an artificial number of pulses to reach the converter 44 (as
indicated schematically by the dashed line 56) so that the meter 50 is set
to mid-position where it remains until the next input is received.
Clearly the meter 50 could be replaced by a digital display device in which
case the converter 44 would be omitted and the sample-and-hold circuit 46
would be replaced by a latching circuit, which could conveniently be
combined with the latching circuit 42. A scale adjustment would be needed
to allow for the fact that each output unit from the discriminator
represents 0.3 cents rather than one cent, and it would be desirable to
provide an output which varied positive and negative about zero.
By repeating the operation for different strings, with different settings
of the octave and tone switches, the whole instrument may be tuned. When
tuning different octaves, it may in fact be desirable to tune the octave
containing middle A accurately at 440 Hz, and then to tune the other
octaves so that each note is accurately tuned to the first harmonic of the
note in the octave below. The procedure for this involves the following
steps: (i) tune middle A, (ii) set the octave switch to one octave higher,
i.e. the first harmonic of middle A, and note the meter reading, and (iii)
tune the next higher A to the same meter reading.
The pick-up head 12 comprises a simple oscillator, supplied either by a
separate battery or directly from the main circuit. The output of the
oscillator is conveniently taken from one end of an oscillator coil via a
voltage doubling circuit, while the other end of the coil is conneted to a
sensor head. The circuit diagram of one example of pick-up head is shown
in FIG. 2 and will be clear from an inspection thereof.
The sensor iteself is capacitative, and can be formed simply of a strip of
metal extending transversely across the strings. Typically the strip is
long enough to span the strings of one octave. The strip may be used
edge-on or face-on to the strings. An example of the sensor is illustrated
in FIG. 3.
Such a sensor is of particular use in tuning harpsichords. For tuning the
lower ranks of strings of a harpsichord, the sensor can take the form of a
comb-shaped member, possibly with curved or bent teeth which can pass
between strings of the upper rank so as to be in close proximity to the
lower rank.
Alternatively, the capacitative sensor can be replaced by a microphone, and
this will be necessary for tuning other instruments, e.g. wind
instruments.
The combination of the automatic gain control circuits and the sample and
hold circuit permits the apparatus to be used in the presence of
considerable background noise, which in practice is a great advantage.
This noise immunity is further enhanced when the capacitative sensor is
used.
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Description  |
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